This was published 5 months ago
When Dogg met Dopp: The night Snoop and his lookalike finally came face to face
Snoop Dogg was everywhere during his visit to Melbourne as the headliner for the AFL grand final pre-game show – so much so that you might have wondered if there were two of him.
Well, there were. Sort of.
In Melbourne at the same time as the 53-year-old rapper was the man dubbed his “official doppelganger”, Eric Finch. Like matter and anti-matter, or the two Captain Kirks in that famous episode of Star Trek, everything would be fine, so long as they never came together.
Finch is a 57-year-old former Marine who was working in “talent relations” in LA nightclubs when people began pointing out his uncanny resemblance to the rapper. By 2017, he had signed with a talent agency and was stepping out as a plausible (if somewhat shorter) simulacrum of Snoop, appearing in ads, music videos, and movies as the rapper’s stand-in. In 2020, Finch was admitted to SAG-AFTRA, the actors’ guild, on the strength of this work.
“I don’t know what happened,” he told 10 News on Friday, when asked how it all came to pass. “I just got blessed, and next thing you know, I look like him, or rather he looks like me.”
Though Snoop is an absolute master of commercial deals, he apparently gets no cut of Finch’s earnings. But he has given his blessing to having his lookalike step out in his stead.
This week, for instance, while Snoop was busy with his AFL-related appearances, Finch was doing duty for wine brand 19 Crimes, part of the Treasury Wine Estates stable, in his place (Snoop appears as one of the criminals featured on the labels).
Finch was flown out by the marketing agency Bolster specifically to capitalise on Snoop’s presence in the city, popping up with glasses of the good stuff here and there, surprising punters on the streets and in bottle shops, and generally leading people to believe they had seen the hip-hop superstar when actually they hadn’t.
Not that he lies about it.
When people see him, Finch told Ten News: “It’s like a sense they get joy, it’s happiness, you know what I’m saying?” But when they ask if he really is Mr Dogg, “I tell them the truth. I say: ‘Well no, I’m not Snoop, but we do look a little bit alike. My name is Eric Finch.’”
The illusion lasts so long as no one pulls out a tape measure (Snoop is 193 centimetres, Finch stands half a head shorter). And so long as the two don’t share the same space.
But on Saturday night, at a post-game party at CBD venue Ms Collins, where Snoop performed a set as DJ Snoopadelic, they did.
Related Article
It’s not the first time Snoop Dogg and Snoop Dopp (as we might call Mr Finch) have been spotted together, but it is a rarity.
And in case you’re wondering, that’s Snoop in the white and Finch in the blue. We think.
Find out the next TV, streaming series and movies to add to your must-sees. Get The Watchlist delivered every Thursday.
Continue this series
Lions go back-to-backUp next
- Updated
Fagan reveals the inspiration behind the Lions’ back-to-back premierships
Chris Fagan said a quote from Nelson Mandela, the former president of South Africa and anti-apartheid activist, had been crucial to the Lions’ rise.
- Updated
What does a Norm Smith medallist do before the grand final? Googles himself
On Saturday morning, Will Ashcroft googled himself. He found a YouTube clip of last year’s grand final and him winning the Norm Smith Medal. Then he went out and created another highlight reel.
Previously
‘The boos are like cheers for me’: Jeered Lion happy to play the villain
Not even Geelong’s high-profile midfielder Bailey Smith attracted more heat from opposition fans in the AFL grand final than Cam Rayner.